ThreadColourFormatter
Documentation for eth_defi.utils.ThreadColourFormatter Python class.
- class ThreadColourFormatter
Bases:
logging.FormatterLog formatter that assigns a unique ANSI colour to each thread name.
Wraps an existing formatter (e.g. the one installed by
coloredlogs) and replaces the plain thread name in the formatted output with a colour-coded version. This preserves all other colours (timestamp, logger name, level) that the underlying formatter provides.When no inner formatter is given, falls back to standard
logging.Formatterbehaviour.Colours are drawn from a palette of bold ANSI codes and assigned on first encounter, cycling if more threads appear than palette entries.
Initialize the formatter with specified format strings.
Initialize the formatter either with the specified format string, or a default as described above. Allow for specialized date formatting with the optional datefmt argument. If datefmt is omitted, you get an ISO8601-like (or RFC 3339-like) format.
Use a style parameter of ‘%’, ‘{’ or ‘$’ to specify that you want to use one of %-formatting,
str.format()({}) formatting orstring.Templateformatting in your format string.Changed in version 3.2: Added the
styleparameter.Attributes summary
default_msec_formatdefault_time_formatMethods summary
__init__([inner, fmt, datefmt])Initialize the formatter with specified format strings.
localtime([seconds]) -> (tm_year,tm_mon,tm_mday,tm_hour,tm_min,
format(record)Format the specified record as text.
formatException(ei)Format and return the specified exception information as a string.
formatMessage(record)formatStack(stack_info)This method is provided as an extension point for specialized formatting of stack information.
formatTime(record[, datefmt])Return the creation time of the specified LogRecord as formatted text.
usesTime()Check if the format uses the creation time of the record.
- __init__(inner=None, fmt=None, datefmt=None)
Initialize the formatter with specified format strings.
Initialize the formatter either with the specified format string, or a default as described above. Allow for specialized date formatting with the optional datefmt argument. If datefmt is omitted, you get an ISO8601-like (or RFC 3339-like) format.
Use a style parameter of ‘%’, ‘{’ or ‘$’ to specify that you want to use one of %-formatting,
str.format()({}) formatting orstring.Templateformatting in your format string.Changed in version 3.2: Added the
styleparameter.- Parameters
inner (logging.Formatter | None) –
- format(record)
Format the specified record as text.
The record’s attribute dictionary is used as the operand to a string formatting operation which yields the returned string. Before formatting the dictionary, a couple of preparatory steps are carried out. The message attribute of the record is computed using LogRecord.getMessage(). If the formatting string uses the time (as determined by a call to usesTime(), formatTime() is called to format the event time. If there is exception information, it is formatted using formatException() and appended to the message.
- Parameters
record (logging.LogRecord) –
- Return type
- converter()
- localtime([seconds]) -> (tm_year,tm_mon,tm_mday,tm_hour,tm_min,
tm_sec,tm_wday,tm_yday,tm_isdst)
Convert seconds since the Epoch to a time tuple expressing local time. When ‘seconds’ is not passed in, convert the current time instead.
- formatException(ei)
Format and return the specified exception information as a string.
This default implementation just uses traceback.print_exception()
- formatStack(stack_info)
This method is provided as an extension point for specialized formatting of stack information.
The input data is a string as returned from a call to
traceback.print_stack(), but with the last trailing newline removed.The base implementation just returns the value passed in.
- formatTime(record, datefmt=None)
Return the creation time of the specified LogRecord as formatted text.
This method should be called from format() by a formatter which wants to make use of a formatted time. This method can be overridden in formatters to provide for any specific requirement, but the basic behaviour is as follows: if datefmt (a string) is specified, it is used with time.strftime() to format the creation time of the record. Otherwise, an ISO8601-like (or RFC 3339-like) format is used. The resulting string is returned. This function uses a user-configurable function to convert the creation time to a tuple. By default, time.localtime() is used; to change this for a particular formatter instance, set the ‘converter’ attribute to a function with the same signature as time.localtime() or time.gmtime(). To change it for all formatters, for example if you want all logging times to be shown in GMT, set the ‘converter’ attribute in the Formatter class.
- usesTime()
Check if the format uses the creation time of the record.